1. Altered mossy fiber distributions in adultFmr1 (FVB) knockout mice
- Author
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Tammy L. Ivanco and William T. Greenough
- Subjects
Male ,Mossy fiber (hippocampus) ,Cognitive Neuroscience ,Hippocampus ,Nerve Tissue Proteins ,Biology ,Synapse ,Fragile X Mental Retardation Protein ,Mice ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,Mice, Knockout ,Staining and Labeling ,Dentate gyrus ,RNA-Binding Proteins ,Human brain ,FMR1 ,Disease Models, Animal ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Fragile X Syndrome ,Mossy Fibers, Hippocampal ,Synapses ,Knockout mouse ,Neuroscience ,Synapse maturation - Abstract
The fragile-X mental retardation protein (FMRP) is greatly reduced or absent in individuals with fragile-X mental retardation syndrome, a common, heritable form of mental retardation. Morphological studies suggest that this protein functions in normal synapse maturation and neuronal plasticity. Examination of human brain autopsy tissue has shown that fragile-X patients exhibit long, thin spines more frequently, and stubby mushroom-shaped spines less frequently, than these two types of spines are seen in normal autopsy tissue. Fragile-X tissue also has a greater density of these spines along dendrites, which suggests a possible failure of synapse elimination. Fmr1 knockout mice and wild-type littermates brains were processed for Timm staining, which reveals the zinc-rich terminals of the dentate gyrus, the mossy fibers. The Fmr1 knockout mice exhibited a pattern of Timm granule-staining within the stratum oriens of subfield CA3 and the inner molecular layer that was significantly different than staining seen in wild-type animals. The sources and consequences of the altered terminal staining are unclear, but are discussed in relation to immature synapse morphology, a failure of normal regression of synapses, and a potential biological penalty of such a failure to regress. Hippocampus 2002;12:47–54. © 2002 Wiley-Liss, Inc.
- Published
- 2002
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